Low Back Pain - Toe Dorsiflexion (Extension)

Patients with lower back pain due to irritation of the L5 nerve roots may have difficulty with dorsiflexion of the ankle and toes. Patients may also suffer from pain in the toes especially on pulling the toes upward. With such a movement, toe muscles may actually go into spasm with the toes in extension.

Weakness of toe extension will also produce difficulty in lifting the toes high off the floor when walking on the heels.

\"Pain Foot\"

Testing the strength of the extensor hallucis longus is commonly performed for detection of presence of L5 nerve root irritation. The examiner tries to press down on the interphalangeal joint of the great toe while the patient tries to resist this movement by pulling into dorsiflexion.

Low Back Pain - Toe Dorsiflexion (Extension)

Muscles which perform dorsiflexion of the toes are:

- extensor digitorum longus (deep peroneal nerve, L5, S1)

- extensor hallucis longus (deep peroneal nerve, L5, S1)

- extensor digitorum brevis. This muscle extends all the toes the metatarso- pharyngeal joints except that of the little toe. (deep peroneal nerve, L5, S1)

Low back pain| foot eversion

Patients with lower back pain secondary to nerve root irritation especially of the S1 nerve root can have pain on turning the foot and ankle outward away from the midline of the body (foot eversion). Foot eversion is always accompanied by plantarflexion also of the foot.

Tightness due to spasm in the muscles that perform foot eversion leads to pain during this movement. You can feel the tendons of the peroneus longus and brevis as they travel behind the lateral malleolus (this bone is easily felt at the outer aspect of the ankle).

Muscles which perform foot eversion are:

- peroneus longus (L5, S1 through the superficial peroneal nerve)

- peroneus brevis (L5, S1 through the superficial peroneal nerve)

- peroneus tertius (L5, S1 through the deep peroneal nerve)

Low Back Pain - Toe Dorsiflexion (Extension)

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Jennifer Chu, M.D. emeritus professor of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, pioneered eToims Twitch Relief Method that utilizes surface electrical stimulation to locate motor points (trigger points). The motor points are then stimulated to induce strong local muscle contractions, termed twitches. This results in reduced muscle pain and discomfort in the areas that were stimulated. The involved pain/discomfort-relieving mechanism is thought to include local muscle exercise and stretch effects.

eToims Soft Tissue Comfort Center® specializes in diagnosis and treatment which ends muscle discomfort and pain.